A Guide to Healthy Hooves
It turns out there several things that contribute to flat feet, but I want to concentrate on one key one. The horse's foot has an arch to it, just like a human foot. And just like humans, horses can get fallen arches. This arch is formed by the pedal bone at the front of the foot and a collection of soft tissues at the back. If these soft tissues are weak for any reason, they can gradually collapse (especially if the heels are left too long) and that flattens the foot.
The foot is designed to land on the heel - the toe only hits the ground a fraction of a second later. It's no coincidence that the back part of the foot has no bone in it to get jarred on landing - all that soft tissue is there to absorb the shock of impact. In a healthy foot, the heels distort significantly on impact with those soft tissues acting a bit like the suspension in a car.The frog also needs to be healthy or the horse will start landing toe first to avoid pain there, which causes all sorts of problems not least of which is poor soft tissue development.
As a young horse grows up, it needs movement on hard ground to develop stronger shock absorbers so it can cope with its increased weight. This may give us a clue as to why thoroughbreds have such a reputation for flat feet. The typical racehorse is brought up on a nice soft field and rarely has access to anything harder than a paddock or a nice straw bed. It may not get much exercise either as a youngster. In contrast, the horse's wild ancestors would have moved 10-20 miles a day on varied terrain, much of it baked hard.
At around 2 years old, long before the foot has fully matured, the typical racehorse gets shod. Those shoes not only lift the frog off the ground a bit, which can interfere with the development of the shock absorbers, but it also reduces the amount the back of the foot flexes each time the foot hits the ground and that slows down soft tissue development too. All that shock absorbing mechanism effectively gets stuck at a 2-year-old level of development. When the horse reaches maturity, it just doesn't have a strong enough foot to take its own weight and by that point, the heels have generally collapsed and you have a flat footed horse.
Given how many thoroughbreds come out of the racing industry, it's hardly surprising that the thoroughbred has its reputation for flat feet. Even horses that haven't come out of the racing industry can suffer the same fate - often because of a lack of access to hard ground as young stock.
Where genetics may come into all this is that some breeds seem to develop better shock absorbers naturally, even in less than ideal situations. Sadly, the thoroughbred doesn't appear to be one of those breeds!
That said, even an adult horse with poor shock absorbers is not a hopeless case. While it's difficult to rehabilitate poor shock absorbers in shoes, it is possible to improve it with the shoes removed. A good proportion of my case load is horses with under-run heels and varying levels of heel pain that come out of shoes for a period while the shock absorbers are re-habilitated. In some cases, just pulling the shoes and instigating a gentle programme of conditioning work is enough. In more serious cases, the horse may initially need to be worked in therapeutic pads that help to do the job the shock absorbers are failing to do. In most cases, the horse can continue in work by using removable hoof boots.
But the ideal is to ensure that horses don't get into this state in the first place, which is why I encourage everyone with young stock to keep their feet regularly trimmed and give them at least some access to hard ground, whether that be turnout in a concrete yard or regular walks around the local lanes.
We've all heard the saying ‘no foot, no horse'. Well I want to suggest a different approach to feeding. If the feet are the most important part of the horse, why not make the feet a key part of your feeding programme. I've been doing foot-focused nutrition for some time now both with my own horses and my clients' and I've been struck by how often the rest of the horse improves with the feet. It's not uncommon to see a lazy horse become more forward going, a horse with poor paces gradually develop a more expressive trot or a horse with poor musculature gradually develop muscle in all the right places. Of course, with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight, it shouldn't be a surprise if a horse with aching feet doesn't want to move with impulsion, doesn't want to trot expressively or holds itself tense and so uses all the wrong muscles. These horses often don't appear lame as such, but that can be because they're equally uncomfortable on all four feet!
So the obvious question is, ‘what's a good diet for the feet'? Well there's plenty of room for more research, but it's becoming clear that a key part of it is ensuring there's plenty of fibre in the diet and not too much sugar. And it's no co-incidence that we're talking here about the same high fiber, low sugar diet that's increasingly being seen as the healthiest option for the whole horse.
If you take horses with foot problems such as recurrent infections, abscessing, thin soles, bruising, etc. and put them on a high fibre, low sugar diet, those foot problems tend to get better - often dramatically so. All my colleagues are seeing this effect time and again.
This kind of diet is relatively simple to do. You need to ensure the horse has access to good quality forage at all times - starvation in any form is counter-productive. Then you cut out grains (or reduce them if the horse is in heavy work), cut out anything with added sugar or molasses and use a chaff based product as the main component of the bucket feeds.
For good doers, this is often enough on its own and, surprisingly, these horses often have more energy when all or most of the high energy feeds are removed from the diet. Poor doers and those in heavy work may need a bit of something extra, although even some of these can hold their weight well on a forage-based diet. Where necessary though, you can add in products that provide extra oil and protein. Oil in particular is a great way of adding energy without adding sugar to the diet. I also find oil- and protein-rich feeds such as linseed a good way of maintaining condition and putting a shine on the coat.
One other thing to watch out for is stomach ulcers. There's been loads of research recently showing that far more horses have stomach ulcers than we used to think - maybe as many as half of competition horses - and even pleasure horses are not immune. If a horse won't hold weight on a high fibre, low sugar diet with a bit of oil and protein added, it may be worth trying a stomach ulcer treatment - there's at least one really good herbal product on the market. If the horse has ulcers, feeding it more may help keep condition on, but it may also wreck the feet - far better to rule out stomach ulcers first.But you need to be careful here. If you use anything too aggressive (like hydrogen peroxide, hoof oil or iodine), you risk damaging the healthy horn while you kill the bugs. And of course that newly damage horn is the perfect food for the next round of infection.
With careful management of infection problems, really big wins can be had within a few short weeks. One of the commonest causes of a horse constantly losing shoes for example is rampant white line disease. If the bottom of the wall is rotten, it's hardly surprising if the nails won't hold. Judicious use of a mild disinfectant as a short term fix combined with a change of diet for the long term can make a massive difference to how the shoes hold. That said, I've lost count of the number of times I've found that by the time I've fixed that problem, the horse didn't really need the shoes any more.
You wouldn't work a horse with a pulled tendon, so why work a horse with sore feet?
So to sum up, here are my four take home messages to help your horses have healthy feet:
- Give your youngsters a good start in life by trimming their feet regularly and giving them time on hard ground.
- Consider the feet when feeding your horse. Does he really need loads of grains and molasses or would he be better on a high fibre, low sugar diet that will help his feet?
- Look out for infection - don't just ignore those nasty niffs when you're picking the feet out. But don't over-react by reaching for hoof oil and other aggressive chemicals or you risk making the problem worse. And if you can lose a hoof pick into the back of the frog, take that seriously.
- Next time your farrier is with you, try trotting your horse up while the shoes are off. If he isn't 100% sound on smooth hard ground without the shoes, you have a problem that needs to be fixed - think twice before just putting those shoes back on.
I hope that's given you all something to think about.
© 2008 Richard Vialls
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Added on: 20/12/09.
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